Recycling Wind Energy Systems in the United States Part 1: Providing a Baseline for America's Wind Energy Recycling Infrastructure for Wind Turbines and Systems: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

Tyler Christoffel, Sherif Khalifa, Derek Berry, Brandon Lee Ennis, Peter Wang, Melinda Marquis, Evan Sproul, Sujit Das, Mohammad Alnaggar, Adam Brooks, Matthew Korey, Amiee Jackson, Annika Eberle, Frank Oteri, Julien Walzberg, Matilda Kreider, Parans Paranthaman, James Kemp, Haobo Wang, Celeste AtkinsVandana Rallabandi

Research output: NRELTechnical Report

Abstract

The U.S. investments in building this new wind energy capacity will not only mobilize millions of tons of raw and processed materials in existing supply chains, some of which are critical materials, but also create new types and large volumes of end-of-life (EOL) waste streams. Building efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally responsible EOL management infrastructure of wind energy system components is pivotal in diverting upcoming volumes of waste stream from landfills, recovery of critical materials and reducing life cycle emissions from production of primary commodity materials . The primary goal of this report is to organize and communicate findings from this assessment on how alternate materials, designs and manufacturing processes could enable more efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally responsible disassembly and resource recovery from wind energy technologies. The findings of this assessment could inform prioritization of RD&D investment spending to meet Energy Act of 2020 directions. This assessment focused on key RD&D recommendations for three main temporal phases: Short-term (2023-2026), medium-term (2026 through 2035) and long-term (beyond 2035).
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages140
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/TP-5000-87970

Keywords

  • circular economy
  • end-of-life
  • life cycle assessment
  • recycling
  • technoeconomic assessment
  • waste management
  • wind energy

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